Noted British Scholars Tour the MU Libraries Darwin Exhibit

Preceding the opening of the 5th Annual MU Life Sciences & Society Symposium [Darwin’s Ongoing Revolution: Evolutionary Thought in Emerging Fields] on March 13th the MU Libraries received a request from two of the distinguished presenters at the symposium to have a tour of the exhibit entitled “150 Years of the Origin of Species – The Historical Journey from Specimens to Species to Genes” located in the Ellis Library Colonnade. The library exhibit was developed and installed by the Special Collections, Archives & Rare Books Division of the MU Libraries. The guests were received by Jim Cogswell, Director of Libraries, and Alla Barabtarlo and Michael Holland from the Special Collections, Archives & Rare Books Division.

Among the two distinguished guests visiting the exhibit were Dame Gillian Beer a revered literary scholar in Victorian studies who is the King Edward VII Emeritus Professor of English Literature at Cambridge University and in 1998 was made a Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire (the second highest level of the OBE) for her services to English Literature. She is a Fellow of the British Academy and of the Royal Society of Literature and is a Foreign Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Dame Gillian came to the University of Missouri to participate in the Darwin Symposium largely because of her critically acclaimed book, Darwin Plots, now in the 3rd edition, which relates the form and language of Victorian novels to Darwinist thinking.

The other scholarly visitor to the Ellis Library exhibit, on the 13th of March was also a British citizen. Professor Michael Ruse is a philosopher of science specializing in the philosophy of biology, and is most widely known for his work on the relationship between evolutionary biology and religion. After a 35 year teaching career at the University of Guelph in Canada, Professor Ruse was named the Lucyle T. Werkmeister Professor of Philosophy and the Director of the Program in History and Philosophy of Science at Florida State University in 2000. He is the author of many books, including The Darwinian Revolution: Science Red in Tooth and Claw, Monad to Man: the Concept of Progress in Evolutionary Biology, and Can a Darwinian be a Christian? In 1986, he was elected as a Fellow of both the Royal Society of Canada and the American Association for the Advancement of Science.

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ShowMe Magazine Collection Now Available Online

The MU ShowMe Magazine Collection is now available on the Digital Library.

This collection contains all known issues of The Showme (1920-1923), The Missouri Outlaw (1924-1930), The New Missouri ShowMe (1930-1932) and Missouri ShowMe (1932-1957), a long line of humor and satire magazines published by students of the University of Missouri from 1920 through 1964. The Showme first appeared in 1920 and was irregularly published under varied titles until 1957, and was revived, briefly, between 1960 and 1964. The collection also contains a few issues of Harlequin, a short-lived magazine, created by students as a replacement for Missouri Showme when it was banned by the university administration.

Articles in the Missouri Showme and earlier and later titles consist primarily of spoof and parody of campus and student life. The magazine had many titled theme issues among which were: Escape, Showme Girl, Sex, Expose, Hangover, Sweatsock, The Ozarks, Insanity, Halloween, Take Home to Mother, Saturday Evening Pest, The Draft, Hanukah, Alcoholic, After Truman, who? O’Toole for President, A Freshman’s Handbook of Misinformation, Get Your Hand Out of My Stocking, Confidential, and Communist Exchange. The development of this digital collection is primarily due to the work of two individuals, (Gerald T.) Jerry Smith, BJ ’52, Showme Editor ’50 who prepared a history of the Showme entitled, “Missouri SHOWME The Final, FINAL issue: Memories of staff members of the University students’ humor magazine -1946 thru 1963,” and Mizzou editor, Karen Worley, who suggested the idea of the article for the Alumni Association magazine, Mizzou, and worked with the MU Libraries and Jerry Smith to publish a longer and more detailed version for the University of Missouri Digital Library.

This online collection was compiled using copies from the University of Missouri Libraries, Special Collections, Archives and Rare Book Division, the Alumni Association Office of Publications and Alumni Communications and the State Historical Society of Missouri.